tv FOX and Friends FOX News March 27, 2014 3:00am-6:01am PDT
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hundreds of cats taken from an emergency shelter being taken from a woman's house in pennsylvania. the crazy cat lady has 270 cats inside. >> great to be here. i will see you in a couple of minutes. "fox & friends" starts right now. >> thank you, ladies. good morning. it is thursday, march 27. i'm ainsley earhardt filling in for elisabeth this morning. the pope and the president coming face-to-face for the very first time just momentsç ago. but did these two men actually have more in conflict than they do in common? >> meanwhile, first he called americans liars. now the obamacare disaster is your fault because you can't figure out that darned internet. >> there are some people who are not like my grandchildren who can handle everything so easily on the internet. >> stop it, harry. more coming your way.
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>> and mike row is back with another powerful message. >> but i am still here and i'll be damned if i'll stand by and watch them take it all away. they can suspend me. they can banish me from the prom. i don't give a crap. >> wow. more on that incredible video and his defense of a small-town high school this mornings are better with friends. >> i'm evander holyfield. you're watching "fox & friends." >> that was nice of holyfield to do that. i don't think he's really retired yet. he might be fighting one of us soon. >> i doubt it. unless it's ainsley. good morning to you, ainsley. >> i don't think i could take him. good morning. >> we start this morning with a fox news alert. within the last half-hour the potus heads down with the pope.
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there they are outside the pope's private library just about a half an hourç ago. they're getting together for a private audience. what's interesting is when they walk into this room, watch the way it is, the president is shown his chair and then the pope sits down behind the desk. it kind of reminds me of getting called into the principal's office. >> it happened to you a lot, steve? >> kind of, a long time ago. there are a lot of things they can talk about -- now they are about to sit. they can talk about a lot of stuff. it should run about 45 minutes. just because it started out very cordially, that doesn't mean there won't be some heavy talk straight ahead. >> there are some things they agree on, fixing the gap between the poor and the rich. but many are saying they are more different than they are alike. look at the issues the catholic church believesç in; not exactly the same platform as the president. >> let's look at a couple
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of those things. when it comes to the contraceptive debate, we had the cardinal here. he had direct conflict with the president, saying the president wasn't being forthright to him when it came to obamacare. stem cells, one of the most controversial things out there today in medical science, against maybe what the traditional catholic church believes. you have abortions, some areas in which these two are in somewhat conflict. >> keep in mind this meeting -- and the president is in the library with the pope now. this comes two days afterç his solicitor general was defending his contraception mandate in front of the supreme court. remember catholics are against abortion and that's one of the reasons why so many people were upset that barack obama, who is pro-choice, was selected as a speaker at notre dame a number of years ago when he said this. >> i was not raised in a
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particularly religious household, but my mother instilled in me a sense of service and empathy that eventually led me to become a community organizer after i graduated college. >> one of the interesting things about the fact that he should mention that, and this is to your point ainsley about how they may have some things in common is when barack obama was a community organizer for a pwhaoeul his work was -- for awhile his work was funded by the catholic church. >> iç was there at notre dame. people were outraged. we talked to parents, talked to students. they weren't happy he was there. >> if there is anything about this pope, the reason people are embracing him that almost approaches pope john paul is he is tolerant of other people and he is open to other things. i saw someone like russell crowe saying i know how a lot of people in the catholic church are upset about "noah" but he still saw me and had a
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conversation. tkpubg compare the pope and the -- if you can compare the pope and the president, let's do it. >> pope francis,ç 76%, approaching 80%. our president's approval rating, he's close to 60 when it comes to disapproval. you've got somebody who is ascending and somebody else who is descending in the polls. some of the president's handlers are thinking, no doubt, we could get a little pop from the pope. >> the halo effect. >> literally, figuratively as well. you have the president with the pope. if they come out with some sort of statement at the end that would be great. however if the pope takes this time to chew out the president, that could be good for the pope; might not be so good for the pre. >> i don't see that happening. >> i would be stunned if he didn't talk about the contraception mandate considering that the united states and the catholic church are in court trying to settle it. it seems like something where francis, who is a
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straightç shooter, might say by the way, what are you trying to do here? >> might be so convicted by his belief that he feels the need to tell the president that message. >> it's about life. >> absolutely. very important. let's hand it over to heather childers. she is here after entering "fox & f . >> we begin with this for you. 24 people are now dead in that devastating mudslide in washington state. 90 others missing. rescuers say that there is little chance of finding those people alive. we're also hearing some of the harrowing stories from people who were pulled from the rubble. >> iç was stuck, so i just kept digging and digging and digging with a stick until i could s.a.t. a little light and -- until i could see a little light and i threw that sucker up there and started waving back and forth. >> he did not give up. he was sitting with his
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wife in their living room when the mudslide hit. it moved their house more than 150 yards. some incredible new video showing the insane conditions in the indian ocean as ships search for flight 370. see those waves, 20 feet high. the visibility is so bad that all planes are grounded at this hour. but just one hour ago officials in thailand releasing these. brand-new satellite images that show 300 objects floating in the water near what is believed to beç the crash site. we'll follow that for you. could lois lerner be charged with contempt of congress? republicans moving ahead with those plans after lerner repeatedly pled the fifth and refused to testify over i.r.s. targeting of conservative groups. as for answers, don't expect them any time soon. skopb koski inen told
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congress it could take years to clean up lerner's e-mail. >> we are going to respond to the subpoena. to respond fully to the subpoena, we're going t] be at this for years, not months. >> koskinen says there are over 20,000 pages of documents to be turned over. should the u.s. be happy that russia annexed crimea? one florida democrat says yes. >> this is not some new cold war that's occurring. in fact, it's quite the contrary. we should be pleased to see -- pleased to see when a virtually bloodless transfer of power establishes self-determination for two million people somewhere in the world, anywhere in the world. >> congressman alan grayson thinks crimea's vote to join russia was totally legit. he says the russian forces that stormed ukrainian navy bases and took over airports were simply playing the role of
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peacekeeper, this despite the president saying that the annexation was illegal. the takeover may have beenç bloodless but it did not end well for ukraine's squad of combat dolphins. the dolphins, like the one you see pictured haoerbgs they were trained by the ukrainian navy to patrol open waters and taken my targets. when russia took over one navy base in crimea, they also took control of the program that only other combat dolphin training center in the world is run by the u.s. navy in san diego. i didn't know about that. those are your headlines. >> that's where comrade flipper is from. >> nine minutes after the top of the hour. let's talk about the latest debate when it comes to obamacare. on march 12ç # kathleen sebelius was asked whether there would be delay after march 31. she said no. do you remember march 16 would there be a delay in the personal minute?
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no. jay carney was asked could there be delay of the mandate? he said no. guess what? there is a delay when it comes to the mandate. what is the problem here? why is everyone on the record saying no delay and you have a delay, and they seem to be getting a pass? well, harry reid went on the offensive. >> hundreds of thousands of people who tried to sign up and they didn't get through. there are some people who are not like my grandchildren who can handle everything so easily on the internet. and these people need a little extra time. it's not -- an e,mple they gave a 63-year-old woman came in and said i almost got it. i just about got there but it would cut me off. we have a lot of people just like this, through no fault of the internet but people are not educated how to use the internet. >> okay. i'm insulted. keep in mind if you're 65 or above, you're on medicare. so what harry reid is
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saying, if you're in your 50's or your 60's you're too stupid to know how the internet runs and that's why we have now the 38th delay which, by the way, we should point out that kathleen sebelius said it is not a delay. it is an accommodation. you've got to be in the system but we will accommodate youç indefinitely as long as you hit the blue button by midnight on monday. >> charles krauthammer says no, they're lying. they need the numbers. they need more people to sign up so now we're letting them sign up through the middle of april. take a listen. >> it is sort of comical. this is one of the longest laws in american history. thousands of pages, and you never hear anybody referring to section 706-b or whatever because what's written in the law really, for all those words, none of them really matter because they get changed arbitrarily after the law is passed. look, this is cynicism raised to the level of comedy. they were lying when they said it wouldn't change,
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the deadline wouldn't change. everyone knew they were lying. and now nobody is surprised that they are lying. and nobody really cares about it apparently. >>ç it's unbelievable how many people are giving it a pass. this is the fact that there have been 36 separate delays and waivers not to make the thing better but to make it less controversial and less painful because you've got to wait until certain elections are over and certain peel -- people get out of the office. >> we're up to delay 36, 37, 38? we lost track. >> don't call it a delay. it is not a delay. >> this is an accommodation. excuse me. >> exactly. this video is unreal. a train jumping the tracks and going up that escalator and now we know why. what the driver was doing when she was behind the controls. >> that looks like a movie. he says he's gettingç tough on russia, but is the president being tougher on american businesses? fox business correspondent
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charlie gasparino on that coming up. good morning, chuck. ♪ ♪ the day we rescued riley, was a truly amazing day. without angie's list, i don't know if we could have found all the services we needed for our riley. for over 18 years we've helped people take care of the things that matter most. join today at angieslist.com we need a new recipe. let us consult the scroll of infinite deliciousness. perfect. [ wisest kid ] campbell's has the recipes kids love. so good! [ wisest kid ] at campbellskitchen.com. [ gong ] m'm! m'm! good! ♪
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the isolation will beat them. sanctions will increase and there will be growing consequences for the russian economy. >> president obama continues to threaten russia with more economic sanctions but is that enough? a brand-new fox news poll shows 66% of voters think the president is not being tough enough. here to weigh in from fox business is senior correspondent charlie gasparino. good morning to you. theç joke among bankers in new york city and elsewhere is that president obama is much harder on u.s. businesses than he is on putin. >> yeah. if you look at it, look how much he beat up on jamie
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dimon of j.p. morgan chase. this guy was public enemy number one for doing really nothing. on the scale of things not exactly invading crimea. what we have here is vladimir putin getting a pass when it comes to economic sanctions. all you have to do is look at this. the stock market has been up through most of this crisis. the russian stock market has recovered. why is that? because the market, the traders, the investment pros see these sanctions as being essentiallyç toothless. >> it's interesting because as soon as the second round of sanctions were announced the stock market went up in russia because -- i think it went up something like 4% because the russians go that's it? that's all they got? >> what's fascinating is we have a $17 trillion economy. they have a $2 trillion economy. we have a very diversified economy. they have one business: oil and natural gas exploration. energy. we could if we wanted to, if we could take some pain,
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inflict a lot of pain on their economy and essentially crush them. the question is why aren't we? i think what the president is saying is this, there is one thing working under obamanomics. that is the stock market is up. if he's worried about anything notç working, that is the dow going down 3,000 points f. we freeze everything that will have some impact on our economy. if you want to stop putin maybe that is the price worth paying. spaeup that would mean -- >> that would mean you would have to stand for something. a lot of people say the president is about the domestic agenda. he doesn't care about foreign affairs. >> remember what he said? i'm more worried about a nuclear bomb in manhattan than i am worried about this. that is true, we care about what's going on here. suppose putin doesn't stop here. suppose he wants to go into estonia? do we want to give up that part of the world to him when for now we're willing
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off the dow, maybe some economic impact just to stop him, squeeze him and force their economy into a true recession. then you wonder what will putin's power be if that economy starts to fail in a massive way? >> what has the president done? made sure we're really cracking down on 33 russians and ukrainians so they can't go to miami beach when it is really cold out there. >> 33 mugs that used to be in the kgb are now in the russian mafia. >> it should go without saying but because of recent events apparently the government feels the need to remind pilots land at the right airport. otherwise bags are going to get lost. and other things. when you think of a pharmacy, you think of healthy stuff. dr. marc siegel from the foxç news medical a team says that is not always the case and he is in a drug store to prove it.
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do you ever get lost among the countless vitamins and supplements and drugs that claim to cure your every ailment? our fox news medical aç team dr. marc siegel is breaking down the good, the bad and the surprisingly unhealthy products found at your local pharmacy. he joins us live from c.o. bigelow here in new york city. good morning, dr. segal. >> we're at america's
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oldest apothecary. thomas edison came here to have a sore finger treated. eleanor roosevelt has been here, many famous others including peter johnson jr. come here. the question is do people come here for the right things? i'm concerned at this point in time with everything available over the counter, are doctors involved? do patients just choose what they want. we have stomach medications here like zantac. they may be good initially to get rid of a ache but you can get acid rebound. xithromax, centers for disease control say 23,000 deaths occur from overuse of antibiotics. you have weight loss agents. this stuff can rev you up, some people can't tolerate that. are the right people taking the right medicines?
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>> what about the good stuff? >> ainsley, i think there is good stuff. i think there's a lot of vitamin d deficiency in this country especially with not getting enoughç sunlight. we have vitamin d-3, i recommend this to most of my patients, 1,000 to 2,000 units a day. a lot of people who are b-12 deficient. i tell them to get this over the current, put it under their tongue. with allergy season coming you have a lot of antihistamines, check with your doctor because these antihistamines are problematic if you have heart trouble. they can be very good to keep away those allergies this time of year. >> what role should the pharmacist play in all of this? >> very important role, ainsley. we're joined today by ian ginsberring, the owner and
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pharmacist here. he playsç an important role. he plays like a back stop role or gatekeeper. i've argued with him on the phone several times, but he's here very importantly to inform his patients. ian, what is your role if people come in here and maybe not always for the right thing? >> the pharmacist is like the liaison between the patient and doctor. most patients aren't seeing doctors as much as they used to. co-pays are too high, they don't have the time to do it. they seem to self-med indicate. they come to us, tell us what's wrong. we give them the right recommendations. >> you ever tell them not to take something like one of those stomach pills? >> plenty of times we tell them don'tç take this, we think you should see a doctor, we think there is something else going on we think you should look into. >> you're a very wise man. we're going to choose the right medicine. >> thank you dr. segal. mike rowe is back with a
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powerful new message. >> but i am still here and i'll be [bleep] if i'll stand by and watch them take it all away. they can suspend me. >> more on that incredible video and his defense of a small-town high school. cnn workers police say tried to sneak on top of the world trade center continue making news this morning. first happy birthday to singer mariah carey. she is 44 today. ♪ ♪ play close. good and close. help keep teeth clean and breath fresh with beneful healthy smile snacks. with soft, meaty centers and teeth cleaning texture ...it's dental that tastes so good. beneful healthy smilfood and snacks.
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>> there's a powerful man telling me not to talk yet but now i can talk. we are back everybody. it's your shot of the morning. the wait is over. you can now -- you can now have breakfast in the morning at taco bell. >> that's right. taco bell's long awaited restaurant menu is available today. >> we've got new menu items in the studio. for the first time taco bell is serving breakfast. what do you have? >> they're famous for tacos. this is the waffle taco. it's got scrambled eggs,
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some cheese. >> that looks tkhraoerbs. tkhraoerbs. -- looks delicious. >> it does. it's wrapped in a waffle. then they have this thing called the crunchç wrap which reminds me of something on the lunch menu. >> it looks like the inside was taken hostage. >> i love that. sausage, scrambled eggs, cheese. this is thick, which i like carbs. >> we'll be eating these during the commercial. the cinnabonn delight. little nugget-size things at taco bell. >> you have coffee with the safety snap. a lot of times people think i made the commitment to have coffee, now it is going to spill all over me. nówdó+áu have a great cap. >> everything on this menu is $2.49. it's very affordable and a third of their menu is
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under 300 calories. >> if you walk in with $2.50, you'll get a penny back. >> very good. >> mike rowe has been on this program a number of times and he has a new cause. the cause comes from ottowa, illinois because the school board there has voted to discontinue shop classes, vocational classes, which when you think about it, it's pretty stupid. that's where the people who repair the infrastructure, build things in town come from. we're talking about at the high school level. what he's done is he's figured out i've got a voice, i've got a platform, i've got something to say. >> mike rowe is all about the blue-collar worker. there are jobs out there but we don't know how to do them any more because people are not plumbers, not electricians, not builders. when he saw this happening at a high school, he took action. i think you'll be pretty moved by this 40 seconds of an ad he just put out. >> i made things and i took
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pride in the things i made. and then one day they pulled the plugs and the building trades were gone. but i am still here and i'll be [bleep] if i'll stand by and watch them they can suspend me. they can banish me from the prom. i really don't give a crap. it's time to get back to what ottowa does best because wood is a beautiful thing. >> 130 students were suspended for three days. some of them had to miss their senior prom and the instructor of the class was fired. >> it was all a protest. students were going we like the instructor. we like the fact that we're learning stuff. and so what he's talking about, the suspension and the prom, that's why that all makes sense. ultimately you've got to
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figure that they're being a little shortsighted. who will do the building in that town? who will be the plumber? >> mike rowe voiced over that wal-mart ad to talk about how many jobs they're going to be bringing to this country andç they talk about how we don't make anything anymore. people didn't like that because small businesses have moved out. the bottom line is they're investing and manufacturing in this country. mike rowe took on all his critics from bill maher to maria molina. he was here and been everywhere defending that. >> let's hand it over to heather childers for headlines. >> we begin with this. it is a massive fire in boston that left two fire fighters dead. they were trapped inside the basement of a brownstone when flames fueled by high winds tore through the house. a 30-year-old veteran -- a 30-yqb) veteran fire fighter says that he has never seen a fire spread so
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fast. >> we lost two heroes here today. it makes me proud to be mayor of the city of boston after watching the way that the men and women of the boston fire department worked today. these two heroes ran into a burning building, got people out of the building. >> the two men who lost their lives, 43-year-old lieutenant edward walsh and 33-year-old michael kennedy. 13 other fire fighters are hurt. the cause of the fire not yet known. asleep at the wheel, the operator of that train that derailed at chicago's o'hare airport admitted she dozed off just before the crash. 32 people were hurt when the train jumped the track and plowed up anç escalator, and this isn't the first time she has done it. apparently in february she fell asleep and missed a stop. a little reminder from the ntsb to pilots.
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don't forget to land at the right airport. the message comes after two pilots landed at the wrong airports in just the past six months. a pilot of a southwest flight landed at the wrong airport in missouri and a boeing 747 landed at the wrong airport in kansas. government data shows at least 150 flights have made errors when landing over the past two decades. that's a little concerning. two cnnç producers released without bail after they were charged with sneaking into the world trade center. they were busted for trespassing while trying to report on how easy it is to get past security. apparently not so much for them. but last week police arrested a 16-year-old for entering the site and making it all the way to the top of the freedom tower. on monday three men were busted after parachuting from the building. and those are your headlines. back to you. >> thank you very much. i'm almost done with my -- the crunch wrap.
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ainsley had a bite. >> it's delicious. >> taco bell has a breakfast. while steve eats his breakfast might be a perfect time for maria molina to color in her maps. >> we actually have some very cool clouds across californiaç yesterday. when you think of tornadoes you typically do not think of california. in willow, california, we had a tornado move through that region. not just tornado but also large hail reported out here. a confirmed california in classic county, california. we could see more of that today across the plains. as you head out the door this morning i want to show you your current wind chill temperatures. across parts of the northeast, another very chilly start to your day. feels like 11 degrees in new york city. single digits in boston and buffalo. still a little bitç below average for this time of
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the year. texas, upper 80's in del rio, middle 08's in dallas. that warm air could produce severe weather from arkansas into missouri and western illinois. we are starting that time of the year where we start to see this type of activity, the peak of severe weather season is april, may and also june. then by friday severe weather risks should shift southward to eastern texas and parts of alabama. >> let me tell you what's happening in football because they're not playing and changing rules. -l nfl wants kickers to work harder. the legal tryout, a longer kick for the extra point but also for the first time, and also only have two weeks of preseason. thank goodness. kickers will have to set up on the 20 yard line making it the equivalent of a38 yard field goal. owners will have to decide whether they want to make it a permanent rule. a rare glimpse of baseball history. watch this footage from
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june 1, 1925. third base babe ruth, needs no introduction, in the dugout. hanging out there, a guy with his legs crossed, lieu tkpwerg. this is -- lieu tkpwer -- lou ge hrig. the day after this he replaced wally pip for good. coming up on "kilmeade & friends" between 9 and noon all around the world, steve king wrl be with us, the congressman. chris wallace has never been a congressman. steve doocy won't run for office, nor will ainsley. i'm not sure why. we'll get to the bottom of that only on our show. that is what i look like when i'm wearing my old headset. >> half of your show is on this show right now. >> going to bring some of that magic to the rest of the nation. >> straight ahead, the mayor of charlotte, north carolina, might be trading public office for a jail cell.
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play in it. work in it. go wild in it. do everything but wrinkle in it. the perfect fitting no-iron effortless shirt in 4 styles and 31 colors and prints. visit the shirt boutique, only at chico's and chicos.com. some political scandals making headlines this morning. charlotte, north's mayor patrick cannon calling it quits after being charged with taking bribes. cannon was busted in an f.b.i. sting operation for taking $48,000 from agents posing as businessmen. in california state, a
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state senator arrested for conspiracy to sell firearms. he is charged with taking money2%uáz an undercover f.b.i. agent to introduce him to an arms dealer. and then the federal election commission still wants senate majority leader harry reid to explain using almost $17,000 in campaign funds to buy holiday gifts from his granddaughter's jewelry business. reid said that he will pay his campaign back that money. >> get to keep the jewelry? get ready for the return of rio. >> the entire animated cast is back for the much anticipated sequel. >> we have encountered a wild blue macaw deep in the amazon jungle. >> not the only? >> rio 2 promises fun for the entireç family but will it be as good as the first?
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that's always the question. let's step into the fox light with mr. michael tammero who had a chance to talk with the stars on the blue carpet. >> that's right. good morning, guys. 20th century fox took over miami beach over the weekend for the global premiere of "rio 2." they kicked it off at the world's biggest sam about a event ever, samba party. rio 2 reunites the same voices. andy garcia joins the cast. we caught up with some of the stars on the blueç carpet. >> i think the first film we got to get to know rio so well and in this one we get to know the amazon. we go deeper into brazil which means there is more color, more diversity. >> i think music and animated movies are growing and growing and growing. the first one was so strong. they just went even bigger
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and more, and i think it is a tribute to the brazilian sound as we're hearing now, love it. >> i think it is a testament that everybody came back and we added characters. the first one was worldwide. they said if you watched this movie and saved your ticket stub you will receive one month free of obamacare. >> we just heard chenowith talk about the sound. >> there is a single called what is love by janelle monet. she will be performing it for the first time on american idol. i think we have sound of it. we don't have video. >> revisiting the franklin show. remember he used to sit there and play an album with you just sitting there? >> i think we owe him money. >> it is a great movie, great for adults and kids. it teaches kids a little
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bit about geography and the environment. george lopez is a fan of this show and told me to say hello to you guys. >> go back to miami. tell him we say hi back.ç >> george lopez getting a new show; right? isn't he getting a new series? >> i don't know. i think so. >> at my wife evidently my wife watches that show. i wake up to it every day at 2:30. >> your wife is watching television at 2:30? >> whatever channel she has on, i wake up every day to george's repeat. >> maybe with the new show there won't be repeats. >> i hope not. >> michael, thank you so much. looks like a great movie. >> coming up on this thursday, here's something you don't normally hear from a democrat. don't defend the health care law if you want to get reelected. the democratic pollster who said that is linda lake. here live. >> apparently a free education is not enough. some college football players now allowed to unionize. will that happen?
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scholarships at nonpublic schools who are not in their first year ofç eligibility. so if you're presumably a sophomore, junior or senior and on a full athletic scholarship and this ruling is not disturbed, you can join a union, and that union, if it has a majority vote of the students in that school or on that team, can bargain collectively with the coaches and with the athletic directors. brian, you're the expert on athletics. i'm on the law. if it's undisturbed, as i see it, it will radically change the relationship between player athletes and their coaches, player athletes and their schools. >> you brought up so many great points but here's one of them. private institutions,
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public institutions if you run a state run school it doesn't apply to you. if you're a full scholarship student athlete you're eligible to join a union which we assume will result in some typeç of salary and all these rights whether it is practiced or different things. i heard one of these guys who won this case talking this morning and he said they were given permission to have a vote at northwestern to form this union. they're not waiting for the appeal on this verdict. they're not waiting for president obama's panel. >> under the law they don't have to wait for the appeal. northwestern university would have to go to the panel and get an order staying, stopping, delaying the union vote until the panel rules. there are hundreds of hearing officers around the country and ordinarily a rulingç of this magnitude would not become permanent, would not be acted upon until the national labor
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relations board in d.c. affirmed it or changed. he's got a lot of rules in there. for example, the scholarships to the football players who brought this come from the athletic department. they don't come from the university. they don't have anything is to do with am democrat mix. -- academics. just sports. >> there's so many ramifications to this. but northwestern is an institution that they graduate their athletes so they're getting their education. a lot of people think they don't get their education. but in northwestern's case they are getting rewarded. in the big picture, judge,ç what changes tomorrow? what changes about the games we see in september? >> nothing changes tomorrow. this will take a couple years to play out, brian. >> judge, thanks so much. as this does play out, we'll see the ramifications
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of it. there was another case coming our way. coming straight ahead on our show in our two, is -- in hour two, is america stronger now than it was six years? the shocking reversal in a brand-new fox news poll at the top of the hour. spring is here and soon your lawn will be too. we've got the best mowers and tractors for ourç turf. ♪ people out. like this one. and the ones that keep people in. like your living room. go and smell the roses!
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because just one 200mcelebrex a day can provide 24 hour relief for ny with arthritis pain d inflammation. plus, in clinical studies, celebrex is proven to improve daily physical function celeex can be taken with or without food. and it's not a narcotic. you and your doctor should balance the benefits with the risks. all prescription nsaids, like celebrex, ibuprofen naproxen and meloxicam have the same cardiovascar warning. they all may increase the chance of heart attack or stroke, which can lead to death. this chance increases if you have heart disease or risk factors such as high blood pressure or when nsaids are taken for long periods. nsaids, like celebrex, increase the chance serious skin or allerg reactions, or stomach and intestine problems, such as bleeding and ulcers, which can occur without warning and may cause death. patients also taking aspirin and the elderly are at increased risk for stomach bleeding and ulcers. don't take celebrex if you have bleeding in the stomach or intestine, or had an asthma attack, hives, other allergies to aspirin, nsaids or sulfonamides. get help right away if you have swelling of the face or throat,
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or trouble breathing. tell your doctor your medical history. and find an arthritis treatment for you. visit celebrex.com and ask your doctor about celebrex. for a body in motion. good morning to you. it is thursday, march 27. i'm ainsley earhardt filling in for elisabeth this morning. the pope and the president coming face-to-face for the very firstç time but do these two men actually have more in conflict than they do in common? ed henry live at the vatican. >> elections around the corner so how can democrats win with obamacare falling apart like this? you have a top democratic pollster saying don't defend it. she is here live to explain. >> first we had the rachel, then we had thew there's a new r style everybody has to
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armory. cheryl casone will take us eroes for hiring ourç job fair. if you're looking, stick around. >> they are one of the best band in college. if you're looking for ed henry, expect to get voice mail if you're in washington. >> we have a live look at the vatican. any moment now the president about to leave vatican city after his first visit with pope francis. >> very, very nice. brian just mentioned ed henry. ed has been traveling with the president the last couple of days. ed, they were in there together for what? 90 minutes? >> good morning. >> reporter: when you include the ceremonial stuff. these two leaders obviously have a lot of differences on abortion and social issues, but when you get together in a situation like this, president obama's first audience with pope francis, who is obviously in recent weeks and months his reputation around the world has been building as someone speakingout on poverty, has been very close to the people, making sure that he's not just a distant
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leader. pope francis has been capturing the imagination of millions around the world and so this is an important moment for president obama to sit down with him. the differences don't get highlighted in public, of course. you see the swiss guard and all the pomp and circumstance. they're not going to talk about the difficult issues in public, but in private we're told they met for just over 50 minutes. and when president obama met with pope benedict in 2009, they did air some of their differences, or at least talked about some of these tough issues like abortion where they do not agree. what president obama is trying to do here, though, is focus on what they do agreeç upon. and that is that issue that the president has been talking about. he calls it income inequality. the pope talks more about capitalism, not forgetting those who are less fortunate, looking out for those who are poor. in fact, the president did an interview with an italian newspaper where he said he thinks the pope is speaking out very powerfulfully and making sure there is a moral issue
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as well. you can script these things all you want but it went a little bit awry when the president had some gifts that he brought from america for pope francis. it was basically this leather chest that had, it was built with wood reclaimed from one of the oldest catholic cathedrals in america and it had seeds in there from the white house garden because pope francis said he's going to open up his summer residence, that garden to the public, they want him to grow some fruits andç vegetables. the photographers or someone around there knocked that stuff over. the pope and president seemed to laugh this mishap over. >> get the dust buster. >> thanks so much for joining us. hope to see you back in the states soon. meanwhile, the president is meeting with pope francis. pope francis might turn out to be the one of the most popular figures in the world and the president hoping to get reflective fame or glory off that.
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maybe they are calling it the halo effect because pope francis seems to be universally looked up to. >> ed henry mentioned some of the thing they have in they both care for the poor. but the question is do they have -- are they more different than they are alike? if you look at the list, the catholic church and president obama are very different with their beliefs and what they agree on. look at the list here. the contraceptive mandate, embryonic stem cells, abortion. these are serious issues. >> the big question is whether or not any of those things came up during the meeting. a u.s. cardinal named raymond burke i think about a week ago said this president is totally secularized man who is hostile toward christian civilization. he said president obama moments antilife and antifamily policies. and the fact, the contraceptive mandate, abortion, those are some of
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the reasonsç many of america's catholics were upset that the president of the united states was invited to be the commencement speaker in 2009 at one of the premier catholic universities, notre dame, when the president said this. >> i was not raised in a particularly religious household. but my mother instilled in me a sense of service and empathy that eventually led me to become a community organizer after i graduated college. >> i mentioned before that the pope's popular. look at the approval ratings of pope francis. 76% polled say they have a favorable opinion of him. 9% negative. 16% not yet made up their mind. whenç it comes to the president, the latest poll and this comes from the a.p., approval at 41%. disapproval 59%. >> let's call it 60. that's not good. >> the pope is actually going out there and not just speaking these words. he is action. he's living them. he's washing the feet of prisoners, feeding the
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poor, he's paying his own bills instead of his handlers. the world loves him. >> the pope stands for life. the catholic church stands for life. that is why when they look at the contraceptive mandate and abortion, being are not happy with the president. there is another question, the strength of america or lack thereof, brand-new fox news polls show a majority think the country has become weaker under president obama. take a look right here. as you can see, are we weaker, less powerful? now people say byç a margin, a majority, 52% say we're weaker. 30% say we're the same as before. only 17% say we're stronger, more powerful. that's not a good thing -- >> although the president says the russian based country is out of weakness. is the u.s. safer than it was before 9/11? safer now? 49%. less safe, 39%.
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same, 8%. in 2010, when the president had two years under his belt, 53% felt we were safer. it was a lot higher then. inç 2004, 58% said we feel safer today. we're going in the wrong direction. >> maybe that is because they think the president is so weak on foreign policy. look at this poll. 37% approve of his foreign policy. the record low was march, in march, first week of march, 33%. the record high was years ago in 2012, 49%. but look at the disapproval. 53%, 66%, then 44%. >> the country today compared to six years ago, i think we've got another poll we're going to show. we've run out of time on that. the point in putting all those polls up on the screen was to show you that the president of the united states right now is not doing well in the polls. the pope is soaring high. you know i'm sure the potus handlers would like to see the president get a pop
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from the pope. >> i was wondering if the president wants back his sta he was asked that question -- >> he didn't answer the question >> what about russia being a geopolitical threat. he said they are a nuclear power. what have you heard? can you give us that information? >> he said there were no unique threats, they didn't have intel. it was a security summit on nuclear bombs where they had a war game where a bunch of the world leaders, they all had i think ipads or something like that and they had to pay beat the clock and make decisions. angela merkel thought it was a dumb idea but the president apparently talked her into it because it was his idea. they did it. >> time for headlines. hey, heather. >> good morningç again. good morning to everyone at home. we begin with a sad story. two fire fighters dead after they rushed into a burning building to save residents who were stuck inside. the fire fighters became trapped inside the basement of a boston brownstone when
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the flames that were fueled by high winds tore straight through the house. a 30 year veteran, fire fighter says that he has never seen a fire spread so fast. >> today is a sad day in the history of the boston fire department, a sad day for us and for the city of boston. our hearts go out to the families. our thoughts and prayers are with them. >> the two men who lost their lives, 43-year-old lieutenant edward walsh and 33-year-old michael kennedy. 13 other fire fighters, they're hurt. the cause of the fire not yet known.ç 24 people are now dead in that devastating mudslide in washington state. 90 others, they're still unaccounted for and this morning we are hearing stories from some of those who survived. >> i had a stick so i just kept digging and digging and digging with this stick until i could see a little
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light and i shoved that sucker up through there and started waving it back and forth. >> can you imagine? mac mcfear son was sitting in his living room when the mudslide hit. it moved his home more than 150 yards. ç incredible new video showing the insane conditions -- this is in the indian ocean as ships search for flight 370. those waves 20 feet high and the visibility is so bad all the planes are grounded at this hour. but we also have this for you. just one hour ago officials in thailand releasing some brand-new satellite images that show 300 objects, something floating in the water in that area where they believe it crashed. >> sheer madness in north korea. the country's dictator reportedly making his hair style mandatory for all male college students. the 31-year-old's hairdo is simple and short, slick on top and buzzed on the
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sides. we of course had to know how the dictator's do would look on steve and brian.ç love it! what do you think? you might go that direction, either one of you? >> no. it looks like we split our hair with an ax. we're parting our hair with an ax. >> i love the dye on top. ainsley, we should try that. >> i would like to see -- thank you very much, heather. the kim-do. a dozen minutes after the top of the hour. coming up, something you don't normally hear from a democrat. don't defend the health care if you want to get reelected. the democratic pollster who said that. celinda lake will be here coming up next. >> it's a bird. it's a plane. wait, who is it? it'sç not superman but it is close. the mug shot that has everyone talking this morning. ♪ ♪
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this isn't about politics. this is about the health of america. you have to ask a member, but i believe that it's a winner. >> opinion poll shows a majority of americans, number one, are in favor of keeping affordable care act. they don't want to repeal it. >> maybe they want to fix it? despite web site glitches, countless delays and slow enrollment, nancy pelosi and other democrats are standing by obamacare. we just heard her say it's a winner. but our next guest, a key democratic pollster, is telling members of her own party don't defend it. celinda lake is president of lake research partners and joins us this morning. good morning to you. >> good morning. great to be here. >> we know that you and your
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republican counterpart, the george washington battle ground poll for many years now. what's interesting is your suggestion to democrats who want to get reelected, don't defend it! why? >> well, you forgot the second part of the sentence, which is don't defend it, mend it. that doesn't mean repeal it. in fact, only 18% of the public wants to repeal it. but people think there are serious problems and people also think it's a solution to serious problems. so what we need to do is keep what's good and fix what isn't. >> what about the democrats who have been in congress or the senate for the five years -- four years since it's gone into effect and for them to go out on the campaign trail and say, i'm going to fix it, won't the voters turn around and say, wait a minute. you've had four years. why haven't you fixed it since? there are a bunch of republicans who passed a number of different bills. it looks like the republicans
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are trying to mend it and yet, you guys are going the other direction. you're not voting with them. >> well, only 11% of the public wants the republican alternative, according to the kaiser health news poll. what people want to do is, they don't want to start all over again and certainly don't want to put health care back in the hands of insurance companies who used to charge you for preexisting conditions, have secret caps on your coverage, and used to tell women they were preexisting condition. and we got to charge automatically more rates because you're a woman. so people don't want to go back. what people want to do is take what's good and fix what isn't. and i think until the program started to get implemented, it wasn't clear what would work and what wouldn't. you have democrats out there aggressively fixing obamacare. that's what they should do. >> well, but they haven't passed anything. and that's the problem maybe going down the pike. meanwhile, we just asked a new fox news poll question, if barak
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obama campaigns for a candidate, it's interesting, 45% of independents would vote against the candidate. 18% of independents would vote for that that's not a hearty endorsement of the president. >> well, this isn't about the president. the president's not on the ballot. the people that are on the ballot are individual members of congress and my recommendation for them is to run local. don't run nationally. the republicans would like to nationalize this contest, but people need to run on their own records. and there are districts where barak obama would be enormous help in mobilizing voters. there are districts where barak obama is very popular and there are districts where he's not. so there is not one size fits all here. >> one other question, if a candidate supports the health care law, are you more likely to -- look at this -- 43% say they would vote against the candidate. that's pretty local. >> well, that's pretty republican, is what it is. 43% of the public is republican and republicans are completely
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against the health care plan. but there are not too many democrats relying on republicans to get them reelected. >> one other thing that harry reid said yesterday, one of the reasons they now have this new accommodation or delay in the affordable care act is to give people more time to sign up. but harry reid said yesterday, one of the problems is older people don't know how the internetworks. is that a good way to go? >> i appreciate the leader, but that probably isn't what i would have said. i think a lot of older people are on the internet and a loft us are getting older all the time. but the issue is about a third of the people who are eligible still don't know about obamacare and i think it's a very reasonable solution since enrollment has been really speeding up, to allow for that. >> we'll find out soon enough if they ever do release the numbers. celinda lake, great to have you back on the program. thank you very much.
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news by the numbers. first, six. that's the average number of jobs young adults hold from the ages of 18 to 26, showing that they regularly jump from job to job. more than two-thirds of the jobs held by high school dropouts lasted less than a year. next, 60%. that's the number of uninsured people who don't know that next monday is the deadline to enroll in obamacare. they didn't see between two ferns? a new poll reveals 50% of those surveyed won't sign up.
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finally, 16 million. that's how much the obama's vacation cost taxpayers. and that's just for the flights. the new numbers released by the air force. ainsley? >> thank you so much, brian. spring has officially sprung. it may not feel like it. but soon you'll see the changes with your lawn. and we are joined now by peter, with "consumer reports." you're telling us what lawn mowers, what tractors are the best ones to use. >> we sure are. good morning. >> first of all, let's talk about "consumer reports." how do you rank these? >> all the mowers, we tested and spent six weeks testing in florida with over six acres of grass. >> peter, let's look at this first one. this is the honda. >> this is a honda. hondas are a top rated mowers. this is not the top rated mower, which is pricey at about $700. this is the sweet spot at $400. it's excellent at mulching. excellent at bagging.
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and has a really great drive system. you can push down. you push down with your hands like this to go. it's very easy to use. overall, this is a great mower. $400. you can get it at home depot. >> sounds good. let's go to the next one. this is the toro. >> toros are highly rated in our analysis. they're slightly less expensive than the hondas. really a good choice. this one is very unique. this particular mower -- >> that's wonderful. collapsible. >> one step further, it actually stores like this. >> you can share it with a family member. >> you can start in the garage and gasoline on a regular mower would be a problem. but with this one, the engine is designed so that it won't leak. >> you can throw it in the back of your car. >> $380 for this, available at home depot. >> sounds good. what about this one? >> small lawns.
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electric mowers. they're quiet, very quiet. >> that's good if you want to mow your lawn at night. >> this one even has a headlight. 48 volts. this is our top rated electric unit. >> perfect. what's the price on that? >> $500. it's a little pricey. >> now what about the tractors? the john deere here. >> for many people, this is the ultimate lawn tractor. this is our top rated unit. this is the john deere x 300. it is more expensive than the lawn tractors john deeres that you will buy at home depot or lowest. this is $3,000. those run about $1,800. but you get what you pay for. this is extremely well built. >> i love the john deere. >> this will last a lot longer than the basic john deere lawn. >> how about this one here, the orange one? who makes this? >> this is made by huska varna.
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this is a real value. this has a great steering wheel, very comfortable seat. it's $1,400, where a john deere equivalent with the same features on it would be about $1,800. >> sounds good. thank you so much, peter. good to know as spring is now here. guys, do you have a tractor or do you have a lawn mower? >> i just have a clipper. i go through my lawn just like this and it just builds up my wrist. >> i got that green one next to you. i got that great big tractor in my garage. >> right now you're hearing the small talk. >> ainsley thought that was important, as we did. 28 minutes after the top of the hour. the video is unreal. a train jumping the tracks and going up an escalator. now we know why. what the driver just admitted she was doing behind the controls. >> meanwhile, their job was to defend our freedom. now they need a job in civilian
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life. cheryl casone from "fox business" network joins us live with help from the job fair. good morning to you, cheryl. ♪ ♪ >> good morning. established in 2011, hire our heros mission, there is a lot of work to do. we're going to talk to some of the veterans look for work and hopefully they also can get hired. "fox & friends" will be right back. enjoy the band. ♪ ♪ two pretzels. put in on my capital one venture card. i earn unlimited double miles. not bad. can i get your autograph mr. barkley? sure kid. man my fans they love me. that's the price you pay for being world famous. he meant sign the receipt, fool. greg anthony. haha. hey man, could you sign my hat?
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this week belgium wanted to give the u.s. embassy in brussels a gift to commemorate obama's visit. this is real. this is the gift. they decided on a life-size cookie of president obama wearing a usa sweatshirt and holding a basketball. look at this thing. this is real. france's statue of liberty doesn't give us that. he spent a half hour talking to it. everything all right? >> when in doubt, whip joe out. joe biden.
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>> let's happened it to heather for our headlines. >> thank you. we have serious issues. charlotte, north carolina mayor patrick cannon calling it quits after being charged with taking some whopping bribes. he was busted in an f.b.i. sting operation. he's accused of taking 48 grand from agents who were pretending to be businessmen. >> he's not going to have any statement tonight. in time i'm sure he will have his say. >> cannon was only in office 114 days. he faces 20 years behind bars. could disgraced former irs official lois lerner be charged with contempt of congress? republicans moving ahead with those plans. as for answers, well, don't expect them any time soon. the irs is delaying the release of her e-mails and republicans are simply getting sick of the
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excuses. >> when we say all, we want every single e-mail in the time period in the subpoena that was sent to you. plain and simple. >> irs commissioner says that it could take years for all of the documents to be released. and asleep at the wheel. the operator of the train that derailed o'hare airport admitted she dozed off just before the crash. 32 people were hurt when the train jumped the tracks and plowed up an escalator and this isn't the first time that she's done it. apparently back in february she fell asleep and missed a stop all together. and superman fighting for the truth and $15,000 bail. christopher reeves arrested in his very own superman shirt while speeding down a highway in utah. reeves was charged with drug possession and driving under the
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influence. no relation to the late actor, christopher reeve. and those are your headlines. >> that guy's name was christopher reeve? >> yes. and he was wearing a superman shirt. >> i could see why i would do that. >> i tell you, it drives people crazy. outside dean cain to become superman. it's a hex. >> do not name your child christopher reeve. >> right. >> all right. meanwhile, if you're thinking of a good name, maria is always a good one. and we got one right there. >> yeah, that's right. very common name. but let's take a look at the weather conditions. before we go to the weather, i want to show you this image because this is an image of something called vp 113. a grand new planet -- brand-new planet discovered in our solar system. it's farther than pluto. this is farther away than pluto. icy and cold. we'll be discovering new
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information on this system over the next several years. and a place that's warmer is new york city than that new planet. windchill is 12 degrees. feels like 19 in cleveland and it feels like 13 below zero in caribou, maine. but it's going to warm up into the afternoon and temperatures will make it into the 40s in places like cleveland. 20s in caribou. much warmer in texas.k at del r. the high there will be 89 degrees. that heat is going to be firing off some thunderstorms. we expect severe weather today, from arkansas up into missouri and illinois. and as we head into friday, that threat shifts farther south into parts of texas and also mississippi. let's head back inside. >> got a big crowd behind you. thank you very much. meanwhile, they fought on the front lines to defend our freedom, but then many come home and can't find jobs. >> post september 11 veterans are facing a battle of
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unemployment with 9% in need of work. almost 3% higher than the national average. >> this morning cheryl casone left the studio and she's helping them find those jobs. do you see opportunity and do you see candidates? >> you bet! lots of opportunity. about 100-plus companies that will be coming to the job fair. i've got someone from one of those companies. he himself is looking for veterans to hire. let's bring him in, vice president of military service affairs. the capital one. you've been to a lot of these job fairs. you're looking for our here rose. you want to bring them in. what is the biggest struggle they're facing that you're seeing? >> i find it to be the communication of the skills and the experiences that the service members have had in the military. it's more than just what job did you do in the military. it's really what experience did you have, the leadership, the team work, the creative problem solving. it's telling that story to the private sector employers and once you make that translation and we can help with that, it's a much easier transition to the
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military sector, much easier for veterans and spouses to find the great employment opportunities. >> one of the things we see is on the resumes, for example, they're five, six pages. a lot of the jargon, that doesn't really transfer to the corporate world. but you yourself served fort u.s. army. you yourself were an army brat. are you helping them to kind of make that transition to explain their skills? >> yeah. absolutely. there are a number of different tools out there. at job fairs like this, the u.s. chamber and all these great employers are helping with the resume workshops, are helping with things like capital one's translator tool that helps a service member put in what they did in the military, what experience they had and translate that into the type of civilian jobs that they would be really qualified for. >> before i let you go, what jobs are available at capital one now? >> in the new york area, over 200 great jobs for people just within capital one. we're super excited about it. >> we got 1,000 veterans coming today and their spouses. thank you very much. certainly there are a lot of jobs out there, a lot of
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veterans need jobs. there is 88,000 unemployed veterans in the new york area. they're expecting many to come through the doors today. coming up in the next hour, we'll talk to a woman who actually was unemployed, she was a veteran. she came to a job fair and then she was hired. she's going to give us her story in the next hour. but it's really tough out there. so we're trying to do all we can right now. >> try to get the perfect match. cheryl casone, thanks so much. coming up, the irs says it could take years for them to turn over lois lerner's e-mail. really? the guy who is trying to get those e-mail, congressman darrell issa is here next. >> but first, the "fox & friends" trivia question of the day, born on this day in 1975, this glamorous singer got her start on the tv show "kids incorporated." who is she in be first with the correct answer and you'll get something really special. >> ainsley knows. ♪
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ask your doctor about non-insulin victoza. it's covered by most health plans. we've got quick entertainment news. mick jagger's girlfriend was reportedly $6 million in debt when she took her own life, but written scott's will shows she was sitting on a $9 million fortune. she left it all to mick jagger. it's a bachelorette baby. ashley herbert and her husband, j. p. rosenbaum announced they're expecting their first child this fall. the two met on the show back in 2011. that's nice. a real life scandal for one of the stars of the show "scandal." actor columbus short was arrested in l.a he's accused of punching a guy reportedly because that guy made a comment about his wife. he's out on bail this morning.
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is it a scandal? you be the judge. ed irs -- >> the irs commissioner sat above congress. >> she'll talk to the justice department because she knows that investigation. she'll talk to the people who can put her in jail, but not to us and the guy who can give us e-mails won't give us. >> whether or not you think we need something or that we're on a wild goose chase, frankly, i could care less what you think about that. our subpoena is our subpoena. if you don't like it, move to quash it. when you have a duly issued subpoena, you comply with it. it's not optional. >> but they're not. among those asking tough questions was the chair of the house oversight and government reform committee, california congressman darrell issa. chairman, first off, why is it that lois lerner and that commissioner in particular are able to stiff arm you guys? >> as you know, the commissioner is a political appointee and he's been sold to us as somehow a career professional that would
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be above the fray. but let's just put it in perspective. to deliver all of lois lerner's e-mails has to be at least as easy to deliver 12 years of my e-mails. i ordered all my e-mails to be put on a thumb drive a couple of days ago. it took less than an hour. so when the commissioner is talking about it could take years, and we're saying, give us lois lerner's e-mails, he's talking about the difference between one hour of an i.t. worker's time and the time it takes for them to redact away what they are uncomfortable giving to us. for the most part, the vast majority of these e-mails have no irs limited information and should be delivered in hours. not years. >> chairman, you need some type of threat of retribution. but it doesn't seem as though you have it, your committee has it. what could you do if they continue to stonewall you? >> our tools in congress are limited. sometimes the biggest tool we have is to shame the
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administration. that's not our goal. our goal with lois lerner was to get her to tell. we still are hoping to get her to proper through her attorney something that would be useful since she has waived her fifth amendment. she clearly testified, then took the fifth, then testified some more. we'd like her to do that, particularly because she's answering questions to the department of justice, who could put her in jail. she doesn't seem to be willing to answer questions to congress who want to get to the truth. >> right. you had a deal a couple weeks ago. what happened to that deal? have you been reproached by her attorneys? >> i don't want to say anything bad about the legal profession, but we've had claims that there would be a deal from her attorney. each time he's come in to talk about a proffer, he says she's misunderstood. her e-mails are telling of what she was doing. we'd like to know why she was doing it, what her goals are and if there is something innocent behind talking about political agenda and doing something on
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behalf of the sec, we'd like to have that explained here or if not, she may have to explain it in front of a judge. >> here is the other thing, there is about 19 tea party organizations that are still waiting to get the okay from the irs. this thing, not only do we not know what happened, we don't know what's happening. here is trey gowdy last night with greta on the same topic. >> the suggestion that i gave both in the benghazi meeting this morning and chairman issa is this, and this is what i would do if i was running the show, commissioner, you're going to come back next wednesday and you're going to sit at that table until we get the documents we asked for. and if we don't get them that day, then you're going to come back the next day and you're going to stay with us until we get the documents. >> what do you think about that? what you do what he's asking you to do? >> well, trey gowdy has been a u.s. attorney, career prosecutor. he knows his job. there is a certain amount of merit to if we cannot get the
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information in a timely fashion, asking for the custody of the record, in this case, the commissioner, to come back periodically and answer the limited question of why is it taking so long to go from an hour worth of data collection to turning it over? yesterday i remember trey specifically said, how long would it take to just give us her january e-mails? remember, this is one person's e-mails, this is a person who said they couldn't use the government e-mail very often because it was cumbersome, so she used private e-mail to do government business. we've already got the private e-mails. we want the rest of the government e-mails because we think that the american people should know why she did what she did, in addition to what she did. >> and finally, i watched this come together when it comes to sanctions on the ukraine. democrats and republicans. what about congressman cummings? do you see the urgency in not using the irs for political reasons and not rallying behind
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you to get this information? will that happen? >> so far we've had very little cooperation at all from cummings on any investigation. he seems to think they either are phony or they need to end in about a week to a month. i will say that steven lynch, congressman lynch from massachusetts yesterday was much more supportive of, look, we've had enough time, just give us the paperwork. let's put this behind us by seeing all the facts. i think that was helpful when at least one democrat said, why can't you just give us the documents to look at, particularly when we have someone that takes the fifth in front of congress? >> you know congressman lynch has been strong in a lot of issues. always great to see you, thank you for joining us this morning. >> thank you, brian. coming up straight ahead, as march madness goes on, so does our constitutional madness. what did you think was the biggest violation? cell phone spying or wireless searches? peter johnson, jr. is our dick
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we have been marking march madness this week with our own little competition. all week long we've been asking viewers which of the president's many constitutional violations is the worst of all? yesterday we showed you the sweet 16 violations of the east. today we're heading out west. how did america vote? once again, we've got with us peter johnson, jr. >> good morning. >> good morning to you. >> we dribble on, let's go! >> in the western division between the six month moratorium on drilling and the war in libya, which was the winner?
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>> war in libya won. let's move it! dennis kucinich brought a lawsuit and other congress people saying hey, president, you violated the constitution. you don't have the power to declare war! that lawsuit was dismissed, but the constitutional provision remains and that's a constitutional violation. article 1, section a. >> the president of the united states says that the minimum wage should be 10.10 versus the kill list. he decides who to die. >> america voted and said kill list is the bigger violation. and that means does the president have the ri his own to decide secretly who should live, who should die by drone attack and other attack, including americans? there is a lawsuit going on right now on that particular issue and that allegedly, violation of the fifth amendment, due process. >> real quickly. spying on our cell phone or warrantless wire taps and the winner is?
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>> cell phone spying, again, another lawsuit. does the nsa have the right to collect that data? violation of first and fourth amendment. >> finally, the lightning run. license plate tracking and those national security letters. the winner is -- >> national security letters to your bank, internet provider, credit card company to say hold your records, but don't tell the person that we're looking at it. violation of the constitution, first amendment. >> just like that. >> round quick and easy. three points, steve. >> three points. >> just like that. tomorrow we'll look at the south. if you would like to vote, go to our web site. thank you very much. mean while, it's not me, it's you. the reason obamacare is not working is because you're too stupid to figure out how it works, older people. we'll play the tape. and your eyes aren't playing
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good morning. it is thursday, march 27. i'm ainsley earhart filling in for elisabeth. the pope and the president coming face-to-face for the very first time. but do these two men actually have more in conflict than they do in common? meanwhile, america is the number one super power in the world, right? not anymore, according to you. can you guess who the united states is playing second fiddle to? we're talking about that in a moment. and did you know obamacare is falling apart because americans are just too stupid to figure out the internet? >> there are some people who are not like my grandchildren who can handle everything so easily on the internet.
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>> right. you're too old. that's what he's saying. mornings are better with friends, you're fine with me. >> i'm ollie north and you're watching "fox & friends". ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ how beautiful is that? >> perfect. >> the west point band, they're playing for us at hiring our heros convenient. cheryl was live there in the last hour. she'll be live there in this hour. just beautiful. what a nice way to start the 8:00 o'clock hour here.
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>> absolutely. ainsley, it's great to have you today. elisabeth is off today for spring break. >> elisabeth is on spring break or taking -- we're going to find out what she did, if she turns up on mtv or not. we don't know. >> she's been on reality shows before. >> i'm fill noting in for hannio do a segment on spring break. >> are you really? >> yeah. >> fantastic. by the way, heather has been kind enough to come down and help us out. >> i'm not going anywhere on spring break. what is up with that? >> i don't think i've ever gone anywhere on spring break. >> what happened to that? >> we got old. but we begin with this story. they rushed into a burning building trying to save lives. they were doing their jobs, but sadly, two firefighters lost their own lives. they got trapped inside the basement when the flames fueled by high winds tore through a four-story house in the bayback
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section of boston. the two firefighters, 43-year-old edward walsh, 33-year-old michael kennedy. 13 other firefighters are hurt. the cause of that fire, not yet known. search planes looking for piece of flight 370 grounded at this hour because of bad weather again. but despite the heavy rain and the strong winds, five ships are searching the indian ocean. also new this morning, officials in thailand releasing these brand-new satellite images. they show 300 objects, something floating in the water. and could disgraced former irs official highways likewise be charged -- lois lerner be charged with contempt of congress? republicans moving ahead with the plans. as for answers, don't expect those any time soon. the irs saying that it could take years for the e-mails to be released. years. chair of the house oversight committee, darrell issa, just joined us on "fox & friends" to tell us why he's not buying that
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excuse. >> to deliver all of lois lerner's e-mails has to be at least as easy as to deliver 12 years of my e-mails. i ordered all my e-mails to be put on a thumb drive a couple of days ago. it took less than an hour. >> he says the delay is because they're redacting information that they are uncomfortable with sharing. and the president just left the vatican after his first visit with pope francis. but the pope and the president do not always see eye to eye, especially when it comes to obamacare. but they were all smiles in front of the cameras. the two speaking in private for about 50 minutes and there was actually a funny moment when the president and the pope exchanged gifts. take a look. you heard it there. someone knocked over part of the president's gift box. the president presenting the pontiff with seeds from the white house garden.
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back to you. >> we should explain the reason heather that he's presenting the pope some seeds is because the pope has announced he would open up the papal gardens at his summer place. >> summer will be just around the corner. >> in the spring we plant. >> i've heard that. that's very good. we used to plant and we just would lose interest. >> you plant a garden -- >> because we wait and the tomatoes would never get ripe and it would be the end of october, nobody wanted to go outside, let alone pull off the tomatoes and we felt it wasn't fruitful. >> it's a good thing you're not an american farmer family -- >> we could not live off the land. unless you can live off green tomatoes. >> let's talk about this, the president of the united states is, as we know, we're just talking about with heather in europe right now. what's interesting is as he does this world tour, what is the dominant super power right now
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here in the world? well, according to you, a brand-new poll -- take a look. 59% of you feel that the united states is the most dominant nation. here is the problem -- >> look difference from 2002. >> absolutely. dropping off down 26%. look at this. number one, according to the people we polled, which country is the world's dominant power, the super power? more people say china than say the united states of america. >> 21% say russia. >> it's all about perception. we're not -- we obviously are the number one military and economic power. >> it doesn't feel like it. >> yeah. and the thing is, president obama feels as though and some polls reveal that he's doing what the american people want, recede from war. don't get involved if people's conflicts. however, if that was the case, his approval rating for his foreign policy would be 60% because if that was the case, he's doing exactly that. but clearly when george bush's
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policies, as much people want to criticize them, when you get george bush's foreign policy approval rating, always over 50%. his overall rating was down because of katrina and the economic woes he ended with. >> george bush had a foreign policy. barak obama, many people say, don't and that's why we feel, the people who were polled by fox news, is that china actually is a bigger super power than we are, a more dominant power. meanwhile, let's say vladimir putin and barak obama came face-to-face and they said, you know what? let's play chess. who would win? a plurality of you think vladimir putin, who has played the chess board effectively with what he's doing in ukraine would beat our president by 50 to 30. >> does he really walk like that, by the way? >> i guess so. i don't think that's a stunt double. >> it's a different way to walk.
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>> back here at home, let the spin begin again because you know, we have the new delay on health care. so here we go again. kathleen sebelius is not saying this is a delay. she's calling this an accommodation. obamacare, you can sign up through the middle of april. she's saying not a delay. not an extension, not another problem. an accommodation. >> yeah. what's interesting is harry reid, who is never at a loss for words or able to explain things so well, what he says -- the reason there is a delay, and it's not a delay, it's an accommodation, she says -- the reason they had to make the accommodation is because -- keep in mind, if you're 65 or above, you would qualify for medicare. so this really doesn't apply to you when it comes to obamacare. if you're in your 50s or 60s, you're just too darn dumb on the internet to figure out how to use it. look at this. >> we have hundreds of thousands of people who tried to sign up
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and they didn't get through. there are some people who are not like my grandchildren who can handle everything so easily on the internet. and these people need a little extra time. the example they gave us, 63-year-old woman came in and said i almost got it. i just about got there, it would cut me off. we have a lot of people just like this, through no fault of the internet, but people are not educated to how to use internet. >> by the way, is there obamacare store front now? they come into the store and say i've almost got it? that's too bad. then they have these navigators, they can actually bring you through the entire process. the other thing we got this thing passed in 2010, opened up seven months ago, now we're set on march 31. i know some people don't pay attention. but how do you not pay attention for 4 1/2 years? come on! people are deciding they don't want to be part of it! snap out of it! >> it's not because people don't
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know how to work the internet, because enough people can figure it out in six months or asking one of your grandkids to sign me up for obamacare. >> maybe that's the obamacare web site cutting people off. >> you know what it is? it's the price. people are look at it and going, wait a minute. i can't afford that. we were talking earlier with celinda lake, part of the george washington university battleground poll. she's a democrat, half of it. she said that if democrats want to win, you got to run away from obamacare, to a point. listen to this. >> don't defend it, mend it. that doesn't mean repeal it. what people want to do is take what's good and fix what isn't. and i think until the program started to get implemented, it wasn't clear what would work and what wouldn't work. but you've got democrats out there aggressively fixing obamacare. that's what they should too. this isn't about the president. the president is not on the ballot. the people that are on the ballot are individual members of
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congress. my recommendation to them is to run local. don't run nationally. i mean, the republicans would like to nationalize this contest, but people need to run on their own records. >> apparently they're taking her cue because democrats are now trying to change the subject. they're trying to push minimum wage down everybody's throat and push overtime down everybody's throat and they're going to start with that legislation as early as today. trying to change the subject. i don't know if that's possible. and isn't the president really on the ballot in 2014? >> technically his name doesn't appear, but obamacare, that's what everybody is talking about because it impacts millions of americans. >> i think we'll see that in the midterm elections. >> i can't waiting to into that store and see 63-year-old people saying i almost got it. there is no store and there is no 63-year-old. straight ahead. >> coming up, apparently a free education isn't free enough anymore. some college football players now allowed to unionize at private schools. won't that just give athletes a reason to skip class? judge napolitano weighs in
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she gives me chunky before every game. i'm very souperstitious. haha, that's a good one! haha! [ male announcer ] campbell's chunky soup. it fills you up right. it is finally spring. the perfect season to start looking for a new house. but things have changed since the last big crisis and here to help us through it all is fox news legal analyst and real estate expert, bob massi. hey, bob. >> good morning. >> good morning. what is the face of the homeowner look like today after the crisis? >> has two sides. the first side is those that are
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scarred from being really fooled around with loan modification and short sales and foreclosures and evictions. there is all of these scars on one side of the homeowner's face. they're angry. they've been beat up. they've been used. they've been made to feel like they're criminals even though they tried to save their homes. flip it around and here is what you also have, the other side of the face. they are informed. the homeowner no longer who were victims of the crisis can no longer use an excuse, i don't understand things, because now they know what a loan modification is, foreclosure, now they know what recourse is. legal terms that have been around for years and years and years, those of us in the profession knew and understood, now the homeowner does. so prospectively, they can not use the excuse anymore, i didn't understand. >> hopefully we've learned from what happened back in 2008. what is the best approach for a homeowner who is ready to buy, bob? >> they have got to understand,
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the longest contract that we sign in our life is to buy a home. they have got to understand that they need to get good counsel and advice when they go buy now. they need to recognize what they're signing. they need to understand the terms of what they're signing. they need to look at it and say, am i willing to commit to this commitment for the next 30 to 40 years, because now there is loans for 40 years. never heard of that years ago, where people get a mortgage for 40 years. and listen, those people that were in business years ago, wall street, they're back in action again, man, putting loans out there. so sometimes the same mistakes are repeated and as a result, understand what you're signing and get good counsel so when you sign, you basically understand it and you know the consequence if you don't make the payment. >> bob, we don't want to make mistakes and continue to make the same mistakes. is there one common mistake that the homeowner repeatedly makes? >> i see it already.
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i'm telling you, i see people -- the bottom line is, if it fits in their budget, no matter what the loan looks like, they will still sign. i had some people come in about three weeks ago. i said to him, do you understand that the commitment you're making here is almost like the commitment that was there five, six years ago, the kind of loan that you're getting into? they will still -- the desire for people to own in america, which is the foundation of who we are and while we found out the last several years how important homeownership is in america, they will still sign if it meets their budget. that is a mistake. they've got to become real and understand that just fit not guilty that budget, still with tough economic times, is not the answer. it's making sure perspectively that if things go wrong, if something happens, that if somebody loses a job or pay cut happens, can they afford that loan? they will sign and they make that mistake because the emotion
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and the connection of homeownership will never go away in america. >> maybe they won't if they've listened to your segment. thanks so much, bob. e-mail bob your questions. look for rebuilding dreams, which will be at the bottom of the page. coming up, the video is unreal. a train jumping the tracks and then going up that escalator. and now we have just learned the driver fell asleep at the controls. and it wasn't the first time. then yes, he's too sexy for his shirt. actor christopher milani is here. he has a brand-new movie. we're going to be talking about it. christopher maloney. ♪ ♪ this is for you.
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time for news by the numbers. first, 19%. that's how much u.s. food prices are up this year. the reason? drought on the west coast. $16 million. that's how much obama's recent vacation to africa and hawaii cost you and that's just for the flights. finally, 40 years. that's how long this 1969 mustang shelby gt 500 was locked away in a garage. it was just 8 -- at 8500 miles on it. it's expected to sell for more than $100,000. >> friend of mine had that in high school. meanwhile, actor christopher meloni is coming back to tv in a new fox comedy called "surviving jack." he plays a blunt father who has taken charge of his teenage kids while his wife goes to school. here he shares some wisdom about women with his boy. >> well, there is a girl at school -- >> let me help you out here.
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you're 16. this girl, she's not the one. hell, when you get married, there is a 50% you're going to get married, so even the one might not be the one. it's a coin flip. >> joining us is the star, christopher meloni. good morning to you. >> good morning. >> we're used to you playing tough guys. what is this, tough love from a tough guy? >> i think it's just a straight shooting from the hip, you know, old john wayne style. he's got a very particular view of the world and he's very confident in his stance. >> nsa is that how you were raised? >> yeah, except not quite as engaging. my dad was a man of very few words. but he was a doctor. the character i play is also a doctor. >> and can you relate to this now, raising your own children? >> yeah. i can. simplity, i think your message gets across best with your words and a simple lesson or a simple stance. >> yeah. you have do you have a motto or
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slogan that's going to typify you for your kids for generations? >> something we could put on our refrigerator? >> something that's new real life. >> well, i'll say -- yeah. i'll give it to you. not actually that funny, but i told my kid, i was kind of proud of myself, i said, you know something? if you tell me something, i'm going to believe you because if we don't have trust, we have nothing. we'll always have love, even if you hate me. but if we don't have trust, we've got nothing. that's what we're going to base our relationship on. >> wow, that's a good one. >> i said that to my five-year-old kid and i'm telling you, to this day, he down loads it, he's a very honest guy. i got two children, but they're both very honest and very clear. >> one of you guys want to use it? >> he's using it currently. >> chris, you mentioned simple, traditional values. is that what we'll find when we watch the show?
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>> yeah. with a little aserbic comedic spin to it. i found the comedy refreshing because it's no political correctness. it's no oh, the kids are ruling the roost because the parents are clueless. we like to tell people, there is no eye rolling. >> the old days. you're also in a movie called "small time." >> i play a used car salesman. >> perfect. it's set in a simpler time. >> yep. >> are you kind of like archie bunker a little bit in your way? >> you know, that's how -- yeah. archie bunker without the bigoted or the racism. i think america enjoyed about archie was right or wrong, he committed to his viewpoint and you understood that maybe if he was wrong, he knew why he held these viewpoints. so he was a likeable guy because of that. he was who he was. >> set the scene on "small
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time." divorce situation? >> divorce situation. you believe that a boy trying to become a man, but you realize it's a man trying to understand what life is and relations are all about. >> right. and your son goes with you instead of the mom? >> yeah. my son, divorced parents, we're trying to figure out what our relationship was. my son, now that he is 18, forget college. i want to join my dad at the used car lot. it pleases me, but i realize that's not really the time and place. >> are your kids confused about who is my dad? my dad was on "oz." my dad was a vampire. he's now a dad with some other kids on a tv and in a movie. >> i know where you're going. you can't blame me for my kids. that's their issue. look, my kids have not seen me on "oz." >> good! >> 'cause my kids have seen me in prison. >> there you go. >> and they seem uninterested in
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the sbu. hopefully this will be the one they connect to. >> finally, you had this big stars on netflix and amazon. are you used to this new medium we're talk being? >> that is a great question. no. i'm really behind the wave on that. i'm still really trying to parce out how it's still working. it's a fascinating time for my profession. >> i'll show you later how to organize your beta max tapes. >> thank you. >> "surviving jack" starts tonight. thank you, chris. we have a fox news alert. the latest indicator for the economic growth weekly jobs numbers about to be released and we will have them right after the break. first we had the rachel. then we had the justin. but now there is a new hair style everyone has to have in north korea. that despicable guy is making everybody get his hair cut that
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anbe a name and not a number?tor scotade. ron: i'm never alone with scottrade. i can always call or stop by my local office. they're nearby and ready to help. so when i have questions, i can talk to someone who knows exactly how i trade. because i don't trade like everybody. i trade like me. that's why i'm with scottrade. announcer: ranked highest in investor satisfaction with self-directed services by j.d. power and associates. fox news alert. the labor department just releasing new weekly jobless numbers. let's learn about them from nicole petallides live on the
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floor of the new york stock exchange. >> good morning. i'm always happy to deliver good news here. well, what we saw was the u.s. unemployment benefits declined last week, almost a four-month low. so this is a good sign. this could be some confidence building. so they're firing less people, jobless claims -- the actual was 311,000 claims. the estimates were for more than that. 325,000. so that's some good news there ultimately. and we'll see how that helps our markets today. yesterday we dropped nearly 100 points. so worse day we've had in some time. >> do we have any idea -- i know the data came out about three minutes ago. do we have any idea how many people wound up -- okay. so the number is 311,000 new jobless claims. do we have any idea if more full-time jobs are becoming available or are they mostly
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part-time jobs? >> i have not been hearing about the full-time jobs. when we look at the big picture, you know people -- we talk about the underemployment, the big picture here is that americans are taking part-time jobs or jobs that they are overqualified for. just to have a job at all. >> i know when you take your kids to the movies, it's extremely expensive. if you buy the popcorn and all that, a movie ticket, but we're hearing good news when it comes to movie tickets. >> yes. somehow when i go to the movie theater, i always seem to need one of these. the movie is cheap? no way. especially not in new york. but it turns out movie prices may be dropping, at least one night a week. so maybe you think tuesday is a hot night to go to the movies. turns out they've been showing that ticket sales dropped 1 1/2% over the last year and the average ticket price is 8 bucks. in new york it's 14 bucks. and they're trying to have a
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cheaper night. they're going to try it out in a state. i don't know what state. but have the cheap nights and see if they can lure more theater goers. 'cause people are not really going as much. >> why would i go to a theater when i can watch the stuff that's brand-new at my house on my tv? >> you make great point. there is so much competition now for the theaters. but then you don't get like the guy chewing next to you. >> you're right. you got to pay extra for that. >> yeah. actually i love going to the theaters, especially with the kids. >> right. or what you do is you send your kids with your neighbors, pretend to offer them money, they never accept the money. so the neighbor is stuck with the ticket price. >> wow. that was a good plan. i got to right that down. >> like you haven't done that yet. >> thank you so much. good to see you this morning. >> take that $100 bill and go spend it in one place. >> all right. i think it's time for the news.
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>> that's why heather is right there. >> hello. we have headlines to talk about for just a moment. the devastating mudslide in washington state now claiming 24 lives. 90 others are still unaccounted for this morning. and we're hearing the stories from those who survived. >> had a stick, soy just kept digging and digging and digging with this stick until i could see a little light. i shoved that sucker up through there and started waving back and forth. >> he did not give up. mac was sitting in his living room when the mud slide hit. it moved their home more than 150 yards. question for you, should the u.s. be happy that russia took crimea? democratic congressman alan grayson says this. >> some new cold war that's occurring. in fact, it's quite the contrary. we should be pleased to see, pleased to see when a virtually
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bloodless transfer of power establishes self-determination for 2 million people somewhere in the world, anywhere in the world. >> he says the russian forces that took over ukraine navy bases and airports were simply playing the role of peace keeper, despite the president saying the annexation was illegal. we are learning that the takeover of crimea included taking the combat dolphin. that's right. the dolphins, like the one pictured here, they were trained by the ukrainian navy to attack enemy targets. asleep at the wheel. the operator of the train at o'hare airport admitted she dozed off just before the crash. 32 people were hurt when the train jumped the tracks and it plowed up an escalator. this isn't the first time that she's done it. back in february, she fell asleep and missed a stop all together. and finally, it is shear
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madness in north korea. the country's dictator, kim jong-un, reportedly making his hair style mandatory for all male college students. the 31-year-old's hairdo is short and simple, slick on top, buzzed on the sides. and we wanted to know what would the dictator's do look like on steve and brian. but we also wanted to see what it would look like on myself and anes complete maria. there we are. where are our ears? >> you know, it kind of looks like mickey mouse ears. >> it does. >> gosh. >> we're mini mouse. >> maria always looks good. >> you don't look bad either. >> neither did you. >> maria, is there any chance you would have your hair done like that? >> why not? yeah. >> can we do that live on air? >> the hair cut?
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>> yeah. >> that would be interesting, to say the least. let's look at the weather conditions across the country because it is going to be a cold start to your morning here across portions of the northeast. take a look at the current windchills. in parts of new england, it feels like 13 below zero. 11 is what it feels like now in new york city. and farther west, pretty bad in rapid city where it currently feels like 15 degrees. the high temperatures will be warming up into the 40s across the northeast. also minneapolis. in texas, you guys are really heating up. you're going to be just shy of 90 degrees in del rio. 85 for your high in dallas. and this warm air across the plains is going to be setting up the possibility to see some severe weather across states like missouri and also in arkansas. that threat shifts farther south as we head into friday to wrap up the workweek. have a way to get weather alerts today and tomorrow. let's head to brian. >> let me tell you what's happening in sports. thanks, maria. could change college sports forever. you got a federal agency ruling college football players at
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northwestern university and soon to be others, can now unionize. earlier on "fox & friends," judge napolitano explains what this means. >> presumely a sophomore, junior and senior and on a full athletic scholarship and this ruling is not disturbed, you can join a union and that union, if it has a majority vote of the students in that school or on that team, can bargain collectively with the coaches and with the athletic directors. but as i see this, if it's undisturbed, it will radically change the relationship between player athletes and their coaches. >> it seems like yesterday. northwestern plans to appeal and we'll see it again in washington, d.c. and see how this plays out. baseball. watch this footage. we found it june 1, 1925 is when it was shot. the yankee legend, babe ruth, hanging out in the dugout.
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hyped him is this rookie with his legs crossed. lou gehrig. this is believed to be the earliest video of lou gehrig ever and the first time the first game that he would play. he would play 2130 consecutive games. he replaced wally pip permanently the next day. >> that's what we got. the picture of him with the crossed legs in the back? >> right. i do think it's significant because they're two of the most famous athletes. they're american icons. >> i wish he was standing up, walking around. >> right. if you were here, i'm sure we'd have it in color and you would have said hey, gehrig, stand up. i got some footage. >> i got to instagram you. hold on. >> coming up, he once introduced antigun violence legislation and now, get this, this california senator finds himself on the wrong side of the law. >> that's embarrassing. meanwhile, the government forces us to put ethanol into our cars and keep drugs from sick people who need them. john stossel here with more examples of how our federal
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there are some big political scandals making headlines this morning. charlotte, north carolina's mayor, pat trick cannon, calling it quits after being charged with taking bribes. he was busted in an f.b.i. sting operation for taking $48,000 from different agents that were posing as businessmen. and he once authored gun control laws and now california state senator leeland yi is under arrest charged with conspiracy to sell firearms. accused of taking money from an undercover f.b.i. agent to introduce him to an arms dealer.
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and harry reid helping out his own family. reid used almost $17,000 in campaign funds to buy holiday gifts from his granddaughter's jewelry business. brian? >> aren't lawmakers supposed to protect us? some of our bureaucrats are big, bad bullies. >> bully. they're in playgrounds. but worst of all, they're in government. government bullies are the biggest danger 'cause government gets to use force. it's not just the police and the military. 10 million government bureaucrats get to use force, too. government may use drones to kill people. but if a business wants to deliver products, the government says no. >> joining us is john stossel. he's also the host of "stossel" on the "fox business" network. what do bullies have to do with
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drones? >> you saw the beer going out to ice fishermen in minnesota. this was a business that somebody came up with. it's dangerous to -- >> nobody wants to walk there. >> right. and so they're making a little money delivering with this drone, but the faa says commercial use, that's illegal. you can fly them anywhere you want, as long as you don't make money. but it's making money that finds new ways to do things. the internet went nowhere until finally they allowed commercial use and then it blossomed. >> let's talk about that. you say when the internet goes to the private sector, that's when it became a sensation. >> they were told don't use this. it can only be used for the military. >> we might end up back to the future as we turn the internet over to the world body, whatever that is. now let's move on and talk about not only drones, not only the
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internet, let's talk about the f.d.a. how are they bullies? >> your intro said, don't we want the government to protect us? that's the attitude. but they protect us from good things, too. it takes 15 years to get a new drug approved. that means people die waiting. but that doesn't count. even if you're dying and want to try an experimental drug, they won't let you. >> let's talk about the epa. they want to keep us safe and keep the environment clean. >> and that's valid. but like every agency, they go too far. they have grown tenfold since they cleaned the air and the water. >> too big to be effective? >> they just do too much. every government employee who can regulate somebody has the power of force to say no. when you live in a mother may i culture and nothing gets done unless you ask permission, we don't innovate. >> and you know what? that's the same thing i remember our soldiers were saying when they got to iraq. everyone was walking up asking for permission even to open up a lemonade stand or sell a tire. we were like, go do it? what do you mean?
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what are you asking permission for? >> in america, you better ask permission. >> stossel, he features john stossel playing himself on thursdays at 9:00 o'clock on the "fox business" network and i love watching it on the weekends as well. good job. always great to see you. coming up, cheryl casone is helping veterans find jobs. am i right, cheryl? >> brian, you are right. i am scoping out job situation right now. all kinds of companies are hiring. we got walgreens, dwayne reed. we're going to talk to a veteran looking for a job. we'll help him out. but first, bill hemmer, what's coming up on america's news room? >> give them all jobs. they deserve it. the report is out on the boston bombing. could this have been stopped? we're about to find out from mike mccaul. obamacare is getting hammered by the critics. why one called lois lerner the bad head bob of america. and has the war in ukraine
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from the front lines to the unemployment line, service members from across the country are struggling to find work. cheryl casone from the "fox business" network is at the military jobs fair at the lexington armory here in new york city where thousands are applying for jobs today. let's make it happen, cheryl. >> tell you what, we are on it at "fox & friends." there are a lot of people flooding into the armory, a lot of veterans looking for work. unemployment for veterans post 9-11 is above 10%. imagine this, you come home, unemployed for four months, you finally go to a job fair and
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fate takes over. i want you to meet virginia carpenter. you were unemployed for four months. you came home from nevada, came to a job fair. tell me what happened. >> i came to the job fair in nevada two years ago and sought out the event planner. struck up a conversation and she was impressed and gave my resume to her boss. three interviews later, i was hired. >> you were hired by the job fair. a lot of the people coming in today are looking for jobs. you're coaching them, you're helping them with resumes, doing mock interviews. how tough is it for them to go through the interview process after coming home from iraq and afghanistan? >> it's quite tough. when i came back from iraq and i was in the same situation as them, you don't really know how to approach the situation. you don't know how to talk to civilians or sell yourself as an individual instead of as a team. >> i want to bring in paul, army specialist. he just came here to the job fair in new york. paul, so tell me what you're looking for first in a job, 'cause we're going to get on this in 20 minutes for you. >> i'm looking for some stable
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job that i can support my family and markhor my son -- make sure my son gets to a good school. >> how long have you been looking? >> six months. >> is it tough out there? are you find -- what's the toughest part of this process? >> just the waiting. it's a little hard. i'm confident with this job fair that everything is going to pick up. >> obviously for paul, for him he's been looking for six months. do you find that the longer that it takes to look for a job, the harder it is for a veteran to get work? >> absolutely. just like anybody, when go into the process it takes a long time, you start losing faith, especially when you served your country and you're willing to give your life up for these folks and you're asking for them to just open the door. >> steve, brian and ainsley, that's the thing is it's not just the resumes. it's also a lot of people are looking for jobs. veterans and nonveterans. it's tough out there for all of
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them. >> cheryl, when you were walking around, the security companies seem to be the natural fit. how many of those companies would you see are willing to train? >> many are looking to train. in fact, i was talking to the folks at regeneron. they're looking -- it's a biotech company. they're looking for people that have medical specialties and also another company, air stream. they build those xl towers. they're looking for people that have mechanical build experience. there are hundreds of jobs available. those two companies combined have 1,000 opportunities. it's getting people to these job fairs and helping them get that resume together. >> that's right. it's not quite 9:00 o'clock here in new york city. maybe thousands by the end of the day there. cheryl casone, thank you very much for joining us live. >> more "fox & friends" in just a moment ♪
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tomorrow we're going to be back here, the governor of indiana will be dropping by to talk about how that state is dropping common core. >> geraldo rivera will be here. he has not been governor yet. >> and then kevin mccarthy will be here. bill: fox news alert and the latest reaction. on obamacare. understand executives frustrated. even democrats saying enough is enough. john boehner wonders if someone is playing a trick on them. >> the administration is resorting to an honor system to enforce this. is this a
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